ADVENTURES OF CAPTAIN HORN
too, he got out of water, for, of course, those pools would dry up, and it is not likely he found the stream outside."
Now the captain let down the hammer of his revolver, and put it in his belt. He felt sure that the man was not here. Being out of provisions, he had to go away, but where he had gone to was useless to conjecture. Of another thing the captain was now convinced: the intruder had not been a Rackbird, for, while waiting for the disappearance of the Chilian schooner, he had gone over to the concealed store-house of the bandits, and had found it just as he had left it on his last visit, with a considerable quantity of stores remaining in it. If the man had known of the Rackbirds' camp and this storehouse, it would not have been necessary for him to consume every crumb and vestige of food which had been left in these caves.
"No," said the captain, "it could not have been a Rackbird, but who he was, and where he has gone, is beyond my comprehension."
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